![]() It’s not a reverie on hip-hop’s golden age, nor is it about the Geto Boys taking potshots at the current scene. Geto Boys Reloaded has already shot to the top of Apple’s music podcast charts, but what sets it apart from its closest competitors is that the music feels almost incidental. They’re natural leaders, out to encourage and empower their community with hard-won wisdom and the occasional ugly truth. Jordan, for his part, ran unsuccessfully in 2019 for Houston City Council in District D, after founding a youth education group, the Positive Purpose Movement. Dennis emerged years ago as an exceptionally prolific social commentator on his YouTube channel, Willie D Live, where he weighs in on everything from Black Lives Matter to celebrity gossip to trashy tabloid stories. ![]() ![]() (But also, go listen to those songs again, because you might have missed their messages about mental health, civic duty, and political corruption.) Yet Dennis and Jordan’s evolution from Southern shock rappers to sage elder statesmen has been a long time in the making. If your familiarity with the Geto Boys comes only through hits like “ Mind Playing Tricks on Me” or “ Damn It Feels Good to Be a Gangsta,” you might be surprised at the group’s sudden turn toward community outreach. Geto Boys Reloaded, part of media mogul Charlamagne Tha God’s The Black Effect Podcast Network, is still about the struggle, only now Dennis, Jordan, and their guests are exploring more actionable, uplifting ways to overcome it. Now that credo serves as a mission statement for the podcast that Dennis hosts with fellow Geto Boys veteran Scarface, a.k.a. We gave you a blueprint on how to get through the struggle.” It’s a fair summation of the ethos of the Geto Boys, whose lyrics-beneath all their street-corner paranoia and slasher-movie violence-probed the many systemic problems plaguing cities like their own. longtime member of the legendary Houston rap group the Geto Boys, midway through the first episode of the new podcast Geto Boys Reloaded. ![]() “We always instructed,” says rapper Willie D, a.k.a. ![]()
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